Regular staff/volunteer reflection circles
This criterion assesses whether the organization facilitates regular reflection circles for staff and volunteers to support their spiritual and ethical development. It evaluates the commitment to nurturing the inner dimensions of those who serve, grounding operations in raḥmah (mercy) and mutual care—as the Prophet ﷺ described believers as 'one body' (Muslim 2586). Effective service requires spiritual groundedness, self-awareness, and continuous moral growth. Methods include muḥāsabah prompts with Qur’an tadabbur, Gibbs/Kolb reflective cycles, and ethical case rounds linking service dilemmas to 'cooperating in righteousness' (Quran 5:2).
| Metric | Reflection circle participation rate (%), Psychological safety index (e.g., Edmondson scale 1–5), Action closure rate (%), Facilitator coverage (%) |
|---|---|
| Target | Participation ≥ 70%, Psych safety ≥ 3.8/5, Action closure ≥ 80% within 60 days |
| Frequency | Monthly for ops review; Quarterly to board |
| Method | (Number of participants / Total staff & volunteers) × 100; Survey score average |
| Unit | Percentage / Index Score |
Level 1: Initial/Ad-hoc
Nascent: Informal and sporadic discussions on spiritual or ethical topics may occur among staff/volunteers, but there is no organized or intentional process for reflection circles.
Level 2: Developing
Developing: Reflection circles are organized on an ad-hoc or infrequent basis, often in response to specific events or requests. There is limited structure, planning, or dedicated facilitation.
Level 3: Established
Established: The organization has established a regular schedule for staff and/or volunteer reflection circles. A basic structure, relevant topics, and a designated facilitator are in place.
Level 4: Advanced
Managed: Reflection circles are a managed process with clear objectives, trained facilitators (register maintained), and content aligned with organizational values. Governance includes LIA/DPIA decisions and quarterly dashboard reviews by People/Wellbeing leads.
Level 5: Optimizing
Optimizing: Reflection circles are deeply integrated into culture. Board/people committee reviews trends quarterly; improvements are evidenced (e.g., reduced burnout, improved retention) and the method is iterated using PDCA cycles with documented changes.
Organisation Types
By Organisation Size
| Size | Applicability | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Micro | exempt | Disproportionate training and administrative burden for 0-2 volunteers; informal peer support suffices. |
| Small | partial | Scaled down to informal regular check-ins; the strict 8-hour facilitator training and CPD requirements are disproportionate. |
| Medium | partial | Monthly sessions apply, but formal facilitator re-authorisation via observation and quarterly clinical-style supervision can be scaled down. |
| Large | full | |
| Major | full |
Applicable When
- Organization employs staff or engages volunteers
- Organization aims to operate according to Islamic principles
- Organization wishes to foster ethical behavior and spiritual growth among its personnel
Not Applicable When
- Organization consists only of a single individual (e.g., a sole proprietorship with no staff or volunteers)
- Organization explicitly rejects incorporating Islamic values into its operations
Related Criteria
Discussion (1)
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